Transition from Descartes to Locke [PDF]

Descartes seeks an. Epistemic Foundation. • Knowledge claims that are absolutely certain. – (like the axioms of geom

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Idea Transcript


From Descartes to Locke Consciousness Knowledge Science Reality

Brains in Vats

What is the point? • The point of the “brain in a vat” story is not to convince us that we might actually be brains in vats, • But to force us to look at sense experience as a whole. • We justify many beliefs on the basis of sense experience. • But how can we justify our confidence in sense experience itself?

The Problem: I cannot use sense experience to justify sense experience.

Descartes’ Skeptical Challenge

René Descartes • Meditations on First Philosophy – In which are demonstrated the existence of God and the distinction between the human soul and body • Descartes believes that before we philosophize about the nature of reality (i.e., before we can do metaphysics), we must first philosophize about what we can know about the nature of reality (i.e., we must ask epistemological questions first.

The First Meditation • Some years ago I was struck by how many false things I had believed, and by how doubtful was the structure of beliefs that I had based on them. I realized that if I wanted to establish anything in the sciences that was stable and likely to last, I needed— just once in my life—to demolish everything completely and start again from the foundations. .... [T]oday .... I will devote myself, sincerely and without holding back, to demolishing my opinions.

Descartes seeks an

Epistemic Foundation • Knowledge claims that are absolutely certain. – (like the axioms of geometry.)

• From such claims, all other truths can be derived.

Method of Doubt: • A proposed method for discovering truths that are absolutely certain. – Withhold belief (for or against) from … • everything that is even possibly false – i.e., everything that is doubtable.

Descartes applies the Method of Doubt to... —sources of beliefs, rather than to individual beliefs. So, he will try to show that we shouldn’t trust our senses.

Descartes’ Goal • His goal here is not, in the end, to argue that our senses never provide knowledge – He will spend the rest of the Meditations trying to argue that they do,

• His goal here is to show us that the senses do not provide certainty – The senses cannot themselves justify our belief in them, – Rather, belief in them must be supported by reason.

Deceived by the Senses • “Whatever I have accepted until now as most true has come to me through my senses. But occasionally I have found that they have deceived me, and it is unwise to trust completely those who have deceived us even once.” • What follows are various arguments for questioning sense experience.

The “Malicious Demon” • There could be a “malicious demon” who directly causes my sense experiences, even though there is no external world. – A being powerful enough to directly cause my mental states, but not, like God, all good. – This “Malicious Demon” thought experiment functions much like the “Brain in a Vat” story.

• So, I should not trust any of my sense experiences.

If there is a “Malicious Demon” • Then I cannot trust anything I know through the senses. As far as I know, there is nothing in the world but me and the malicious demon. • But, must there be a “malicious demon?” Is the possibility of such a being my only reason for not trusting my senses?

Second Meditation • I will suppose, then, that everything I see is fictitious. .... So what remains true? Perhaps just the one fact that nothing is certain! Still, how do I know that there isn’t something ... a God [or some other being, like the “Malicious Demon”] who gives me the thoughts I am now having? But why do I think this, since I might myself be the author of these thoughts? – But then doesn’t it follow that I am, at least, something?

The Self-Deception Argument: 1) It is possible that I myself am the cause of my own experiences, and so that I (seem to) “see” objects, even though no objects exist. 2) So, I should not trust my sense experiences.

“I am, I exist.” • This is the phrase Descartes uses in the Meditations. But he wrote another parallel book piece called “Discourse on Method.” – In that piece, he made the same point this way:

• I think therefore I am. – Or, as it is stated in the original Latin;

– Cogito ergo sum.

Certainty At Last! • I cannot doubt that I exist. – If I doubt my existence, I prove it, as I must exist in order to doubt.

• “I am, I exist, is necessarily true each time that I pronounce it or mentally conceive it.”

Descartes’ Epistemic Foundation: • From this “foundation,” Descartes seeks to justify all the rest of his beliefs about the nature of reality. • (In the next chapter, we will return to account of mind and body.) • What I really know is my own mind and my own conscious states. On this basis, Descartes tries to establish knowledge of a world outside his own mind.

Is anyone out there? • If one accepts the “destructive” part of Descartes —his undermining of sense experience, but • Rejects the “constructive” part—where he argues for an “external” world—one is left with • Solipsism: The view that as far as I know, I (or my consciousness) am the only thing that exists. – `To be clear, Descartes rejects this view. But some people argue this is where his position leads.

Descartes’ Account of Consciousness of the World

Med. 3, Paragraph 3 I previously accepted as perfectly certain and evident many things ...—the earth, sky, stars, and everything else that I took in through the senses—but in those cases what I perceived clearly were merely the ideas or thoughts of those things that came into my mind .... But I used also to believe that my ideas came from things outside that resembled them in all respects. .... [This] was false; or anyway if it was true it was not thanks to the strength of my perceptions.

Med. 3, Paragraph 6 “When ideas are considered solely in themselves and not taken to be connected to anything else, they can’t be false; for whether it is a goat that I am imagining or a chimera, either way it is true that I do imagine it. .... All that is left—the only kind of thought where I must watch out for mistakes—are judgments. And the mistake they most commonly involve is to judge that my ideas resemble things outside me.’

What I really knew vs. what I thought I knew • I know that my ideas (or “sensations”) exist – Whether of “the earth,” “goats.” or mere “chimera” (i.e., non-existent beings). – I know these ideas (“mental contents”) exist because I directly (Immediately) perceive them.

• But I simply assume that my ideas “come from” things outside me, and that they “resemble” those things “in all respects.” – This is what makes “mistakes” possible.

What do I see?

What do I immediately perceive? “Normal” Sense Experience

“Brain in a Vat” Experience

Descartes’ Analysis of Sense Experience ll

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What do I know? • I know that I exist. – I know that I am a “thinking thing,” a “mind.” • i.e., the subject of conscious experiences. – Med. 2 and 6 argue that this “mind” is non-material.

• I know I have ideas or sensations “in” my mind. – These “mental contents” are what I “directly” or “immediately” perceive.

• I “judge” (i.e., infer) that these mental contents are caused by things that exist outside my mind, and that my ideas “resemble them.” – This is what Med. 4-6 attempt to prove.

Descartes’ (Locke’s too) Theory of Perception: The mind perceives ideas which are caused by and represent real objects.

Mind’s Eye

Idea

Idea

Mind

Object

Object

Descartes, Locke, Berkeley • All three accept (without much argument) that what we directly or immediately know are only “ideas” or other “mental contents.” • Descartes argues (in Med. 3-6) that there is a world outside our mind. • Locke accepts (without argument) that there is such a world, but claims that our sensations do not always resemble it. • Berkeley argues that there is no world outside mind (yours, mine, and God’s).

Terminology • Empiricism: – All knowledge ultimately rests upon sense experience. – Our justification for claiming we know something must always end up with something we perceive with our senses. • “Seeing is believing.”

• Rationalism: – Not all knowledge ultimately rests upon sense experience. – At least some (maybe all!) knowledge can be justified without appealing to sense perception. • E.g., 2+2=4.

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